Polo mogul John Goodman gets 16 years in prison in death

Wellington polo mogul John Goodman gets 16 years in prison for DUI-manslaughter in Scott Wilson's death.

He gets credit for the 51 days he has already spent in jail.

Judge calls five minute break. Next up is Goodman's bid to be released on appeals bond.

Judge is back on bench at 4:45 p.m. to consider bond. Judge immediately grants another break while prosecution and defense consult on bond.

It's 5:25 p.m. and it appears a bond agreement has been reached. Hearing resumes with a private bench conference. Attorneys are likely informing judge of agreement terms.

Bench conference over after a few minutes, attorneys back to huddling in the hallway. Then they are back in courtroom in two minutes.

Judge says Goodman is perfect example of flight risk, with the resources to jump on a private plane and live very well on the lam.

Defense says Goodman will post $7 million bond, wear electonic ankle monitor, and hire off-duty police to watch him at all times.

Prosecutor Ellen Roberts: If Goodman's adoption of his girlfriend goes through, and she becomes beneficiary of $300 million trust for his two minor children, Goodman's bond could be revoked. Goodman's attorneys list his current worth at $3 million.

Judge agrees to $7 million bond. Goodman's family can't post that until Wednesday at soonest, so Goodman remains in Palm Beach County Jail for now.

Goodman has to hire off-duty police to watch him at all times, wear electronic ankle monitor. Judge says he can't resume his socialite life, must undergo alcohol and drug testing.

Hearing ends at 5:50 p.m. with people emptying out of courtroom, including Scott Wilson's parents and Goodman's afmily members.

Goodman, shackled at the legs, was led out to be handcuffed in the private corridors used to transport prisoners.

Judge on juror drinking experiment: "I don't think it was prejudicial." Judge Jeffrey Colbath finds that it was jury misconduct but not "material" to the guilty verdict.

Colbath begins sentencing hearing at 2:50 p.m.

Prosecutors call first witness, Allen Seaman, an attorney who is close friends with Scott Wilson's father, William. He reads a statement from William Wilson's current wife, describing the night of the crash when William Wilson came upon the scene.

Scott Wilson was not in any local hospitals. "We called frantically to find if Scott had been admitted anywhere."

At 6 in the morning, a deputy brought Scott Wilson's driver's license to William Wilson, and asked if this was his son. "I'm sorry, your son is gone."

"When Scott died, a big part of William died."

Father and son had so many similarities, sports, engineering, debates. "He still has his memories."

John Goodman has shown no true remorse and blames everyone else for crash:

"What has he shown this family but lies, lies, lies... Everyone else is to blame except for poor misunderstood John Goodman. John Goodman has showed no real sympathy for Scott or his family."

William Wilson's friend Chris Jones reads a statement from the bereaved father, calls his son's death "emotional devastation."